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Announcements


Watsu® and Ai Chi: Watsu® and Ai Chi:        
The Heart of Working in Warm Water by Ann Cole, Kathryn Knowles and Harriette Bashi

Water is a place where one can surrender and be supported. We are 10% of our weight when immersed to neck level, a virtually gravity free experience. With gravity decreased, the spine and joints are decompressed. In space, astronauts' suits allow for three inches of lengthening in the spine. Then add warmth. Immersion in warm water facilitates the shift from the sympathetic " fight or flight" nervous system to the parasympathetic system providing the " relaxation response". This is why we need Tamarack pool. Without this specific temperature range, 92 – 96 degrees F, (considered thermo-neutral) we can’t provide passive or minimally active therapy. The person would readily become chilled and muscles contracted. How incredibly fortunate we are to have this warm pool, the only public pool of it’s kind in our area.

The basic healing principle is: The more one feels physical and emotional support and the comfort of the pool’s warmth, the more one can let go and relax. This is the beginning of trust, the antidote for pain and fear which constrict the lives of people with chronic pain.

By trusting the support of the water and the practitioner and letting go - more movement in the body is possible. The body begins to ebb and flow with the breath-- rising on the inhalation, sinking on the exhalation. Water is biofeedback for the breath. This rising and falling breath rhythm is the basic refrain of Watsu® and Ai Chi- it is what we refer to as the “Water Breath Dance.”

In water it is very easy to feel one’s breath and to tune into another's breathing pattern. The matching of the practitioner’s touch and movement in synch with the breathing pattern of their client creates a powerful healing connection. It leads to the client’s self- awareness and self-correction of breath and muscular holding patterns. Afterwards, through imagery and words, we encourage people to integrate and make conscious their experiences from Watsu® and Ai Chi - so they can remember the pleasurable, flowing, and supportive sensation on land.

The client and practitioner become partners in releasing tension and pain. Experiencing the body as a source of pleasurable sensation and movement is relearned.

Watsu® and Ai Chi bring trust, movement, and awareness through flowing warm water experiences. Pleasure replaces pain. Trust replaces fear. Awareness, pleasure and movement heal.



 Swim Lesson Sessions Swim Lesson Sessions       
Winter 1 January 2nd - January 26th

Winter 2 January 30th - February 23rd

Winter 3 February 27th - March 22nd

Please Call (541)686-9290 for registration information.



Fibromyalgia Awareness Day  May 12thFibromyalgia Awareness Day May 12th       
Fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) is one of a mysterious group of chronic pain disorders producing painful symptoms characterized by long-term, body-wide pain with tender points. Symptoms often refer to joints, muscles, tendons and other soft tissues and can be confused with arthritis or connective tissue disease. Thought to be a primary neurological disorder, Fibromyalgia has also been linked to fatigue, morning stiffness, sleep problems, headaches, numbness in hands and feet, depression and anxiety. The exact cause is unknown. More women than men are afflicted with FMS and a genetic component is implicated. While the severity of symptoms fluctuates from person to person, FMS may reach disabling proportions in some. Psychological complications often arise, shaped by the individual’s personality, biography and coping resources. Multidsciplinary care is most effective.


May 12th is the birthday of Florence Nightingale, the English army nurse and Red Cross pioneer. She became ill while working on the front lines during the Crimean War (1854 – 1856) and never fully recovered. Ms. Nightingale was virtually bedridden for 50 years, suffering with unrelenting pain and fatigue. It is now thought she suffered from Fibromyalgia and Chronic Fatigue. Despite her illness, she managed to found the first ever School of Nursing. The warm 92-degree salt waters of Tamarack Wellness Center would have soothed her troubled body.

In honor of this tremendous healer, May 12th became the International Fibromyalgia Awareness Day. In 1993, Tom Hennessy, the founder of RESCIND, INC. (Repeal Existing Stereotypes about Chronic Immunological and Neurological Diseases) designated May 12th as International Awareness Day for Chronic Immunological and Neurological Diseases (CIND). Since its inception in 1997, the National Fibromyalgia Association (NFA) began leading the call for increased recognition of fibromyalgia each May 12th.

Today, this increased effort to educate the general public; healthcare professionals, government officials and legislative bodies take place worldwide. It was with this firm foundation that Pain Management Partners, LLC and Tamarack Wellness Center joined their businesses on May 12th with a panel of professionals that treat Fibromyalgia and May 14th to experience the warm healing salt waters of Tamarack. These two events were so well attended, that both businesses look forward to joining again next year for another successful Fibromyalgia Awareness Day.


A special thank you to all the participants:

Pain Management Partners, LLC
Axis Physical Therapy and Rehab., Inc.
Terri Lechnyer, Ph.D., L.L.C.
Ron Lechnyr, PhD. D.S.W.
Darby Valley,L.Ac. DOAM
Coleen Stevenson Bodywork
Hariette Bashi, PT
Ann Cole, MA, LPC, BC-DMT
Kathy Knowles, LMT
Patty Henry-Schneider, MS, LPC
Dave Mischak


Please visit our websites:
www.oregonpainmanagement.com
www.tamarackwellness.com



Resources:
American Chronic Pain Association

American College of Rheumatology

American Fibromyalgia Syndrome Association (AFSA)

American Pfoundation HealthyWomen

National Fibromyalgia Association (NFA)

National Fibromyalgia Research Association (NFRA)

The National Pain Foundation

National Women‟s Health Resource Center

Fibromyalgia Network

HealthyWomen

National Fibromyalgia Association (NFA)

National Fibromyalgia Research Association (NFRA)

The National Pain Foundation
National Women‟s Health Resource Center



Letter From Tamarack Board of DirectorsLetter From Tamarack Board of Directors       


December, 2011

Dear valued Tamarack Pool community member,

You showed us what matters! Because of supporters like you, Tamarack Pool has had a bright fall. Closing for two months last summer, though necessary for Tamarack’s fiscal health, was very hard for our users. Many of those who depend on the life-sustaining benefits of Tamarack’s 92-degree salt water for their quality of life were, quite literally, in pain. Thanks to extraordinary volunteer and donor support, Tamarack reopened in October and users are back in the water and enjoying life again!

And the news gets better. Though Tamarack re-opened with a reduced schedule, our users came back joyously, and now pool usage is nearly what it was before we closed. With continued donor support, we hope to expand the schedule in January making Tamarack’s healing waters even more available.

During the closure, the depth of the need for maintenance and program support was made extremely clear. The board, staff, and volunteers are spreading the word about Tamarack Pool’s programs like water exercise classes and specialized programs including arthritis and pre-natal. In addition, the staff and board are exploring additional grant support. In fact, a grant from PacificSource is currently keeping our core programs up and running.

Keeping the good news going, and keeping Tamarack’s one-of-a-kind warm-water, fully-accessible facility open for all, requires ongoing community support. Did you know that Tamarack is the only public pool in our area that is NOT supported by city, county, state, or federal funds? That’s why your support is critical to preserving Tamarack’s vital programs and transformational effects.

The costs of maintaining Tamarack Pool and its breadth of programs are substantial: $175 per hour or over $550,000 a year. Donations support the Pool, its programs, and users of all ages and abilities. Here are some ways your tax-deductible contribution may help sustain the Pool and its programs:
$50 a one-month scholarship for a low-income child or medically fragile person
$100 safety and emergency response training for lifeguards
$500 one set of pool filters or one UV light service (part of the salt-water treatment)
$1000 a new heater that will help with efficiency and constant water temperature
$5000 new blankets to help ensure energy efficiency for the Pool

The costs are high and the needs are even higher. About half of Tamarack Pool’s users live at or below the poverty level. You can make a profound and ongoing difference in their lives by supporting greater mobility, reduced pain, and overall better health and wellbeing.

Today is the day to make the season bright, and the future as well. Because of you and your support, we can keep this extraordinary resource available to all today, tomorrow, and for years to come.

Thank you and happy holidays,

leslie scott, Board President for the Board of Directors, the Staff, and volunteers.








Tamarack received the Mayor's Bold Steps Toward Sustainability AwardTamarack received the Mayor's Bold Steps Toward Sustainability Award       
The award is given every other month to a Eugene business that is making decisions using a triple bottom line approach: taking extra care in how it treats its people, and the planet, while turning a profit. Tamarack takes pride in caring for our community and our environment. We would like to thank everyone who has dedicated efforts over the last seven years to create our sustainable organization.



Mental and Physical Health: Ai Chi’s Essential RoleMental and Physical Health: Ai Chi’s Essential Role       
Mental and Physical Health: Ai Chi’s Essential Role
By Patricia Henry-Schneider, MS, LPC
Reprinted with Permission from the Aquatic Exercise Association, www.aeawave.com
 
Part One: An Overview
In Western medicine, there has been a growing interest in the role of the mind as it applies to
physical healing. At the same time, there is a growing recognition in psychotherapy of the
role of the body as it applies to psychological healing. Since I am interested in both physical
and mental health and am a Licensed Professional Counselor who is certified in EMDR (Eye
Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) and in Ai Chi, I have come to see myself in an
integrative role. The word “confluence” comes from the Latin “confluere”, meaning to flow
together. This applies, literally, to the junction of rivers and, figuratively, to “an act or process
of merging.” That’s how I experience the integration of various health practices, in this case
Ai Chi and psychotherapy (specifically EMDR).

In an attempt to convey my overall perspective of health, I want to share a broader view that
embraces Ai Chi as a way of experiencing the mind/body connection while gently moving the
human organism toward health in a flowing and supportive environment. My growing
understanding of how Ai Chi fits into a larger theoretical overview of human development has
taken place over a number of years in a way that I could never have anticipated. That is what
I have come to recognize as synchronicity—in other words “meaningful coincidence” (coincidents).

To give you a sense of the timing of all of this, I go back to 1994 when I happened to see a
program on 20/20 featuring EMDR. At the time this was a relatively new type of
psychotherapy developed by Francine Shapiro, PhD. It involved rapid eye movements within
a model of adaptive information processing. Specifically in regard to post traumatic stress
disorder, this therapy helped clients to move from being stuck in the past to a place of
adaptive resolution in which they could integrate their thoughts about themselves, their
feelings, and their bodily sensations linked to past traumatic events. This all made sense to
me, and I said to myself, “That’s it.” So from that point on, I pursued training in EMDR, got
the appropriate supervision, and tried to spread the word about its effectiveness.

Let’s now fast forward a few years into the future. At the recommendation of my doctor, I
began swimming at our local warm water pool. That’s where the next synchronicity took
place. I crossed paths with a former co-worker who told me about an Ai Chi class. After
trying it out, I noticed that, among other things, it involved a lot of bilateral movements. Ideas
starting clicking in my mind because, by then I was much more versed in EMDR and knew
that it did not have to involve just rapid eye movements but instead could involve other forms
of bilateral stimulation. The more I practiced Ai Chi, the more I recognized the similarities. I
kept looking for a way to understand the connections so that I might explain how the two
modalities fit together.

Which brings us to the third piece of the puzzle—the theoretical underpinnings that bring it all
together. At an EMDR conference, I heard Daniel Siegel, MD, (a psychiatrist at UCLA) speak
about EMDR but offered a larger point of view. As I studied his works over the years, all of
the pieces started coming together in my mind. He defined mind as “a process that regulates
the flow of energy and information” and defined mental health to include qualities of being
flexible, adaptive, coherent, energized, and stable. It became clearer how EMDR and Ai Chi
support and reinforce each other for the purpose of both physical and mental health. Siegel’s
way of looking at human development and mental health (and illness) is summarized in his
model of “interpersonal neurobiology.” He described nine areas of neural integration, and I
noticed that all of these areas are promoted by the practice of Ai Chi. Finally I had a
theoretical framework through which I could understand how EMDR and Ai Chi reinforce
each other for the overall healing of the individual and how this individual healing could “ripple
out” toward improving our relationships and beyond. I’m not saying that one has to
experience both. However, when one does, there is more complete movement toward
balance and integration, essential qualities of both physical and mental health.

Now, add in the knowledge brought to us by Masaru Emoto’s “Messages from Water.” This
shows us how we can affect the molecular structure of water by the kind of messages we
send to it. While doing Ai Chi, we are sending positive messages to the water both within our
bodies and all around us. Thus, we are changing ourselves for the better both physically and
mentally. If we are so inclined, we are also becoming more spiritually aware and developing
a sense of how it all fits together. So here we have it—the integration of mind, body, and
spirit for the sake of each of us and beyond. That sounds like a big goal. Why not?
Specifically as this relates to Ai Chi, as we practice the individual movements, we can
become those movements, and they can remind us literally and figuratively of how we want to
be. The more we practice, the more these patterns become part of who we are. David
Servan-Schreiber, MD, PhD, speaks of the importance of breath work, and to quote him,
“Acting on thoughts affects body functions. Acting on body functions affects thoughts. Health
is an emerging property of their relationship.” Ai Chi involves breath work and acting on both
body functions and thoughts at the same time in a nurturing warm water environment.

Patricia Henry-Schneider MS, LPC is a psychotherapist certified in EMDR and a certified Ai
Chi presenter. She has encouraged movement toward wellness by including body, mind, and
spirit in the journey toward mental health. Creating a bridge between providers of aquatic
therapy and providers ofmental health services has become her passion.



Judith Conrad interviews David Mischak and Ann ColeJudith Conrad interviews David Mischak and Ann Cole       
Enjoy Judith Conrad's radio show from November 3rd including an interview with David Mischak and Ann Cole starting at the twelve and a half minute mark.